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David Cannon Dashiell.


After the resumption of his career as an artist in 1985, David Cannon Dashiell's work focused on questions of love and passion, health and morality: on AIDS, as both metaphor and reality in contemporary life. "Queer Mysteries," the Adaline Kent Award exhibition for 1993, served as a retrospective of the remarkable body of paintings, drawings, sculpture, and installations Dashiell made over the past eight years, since he first began to suspect that he was infected with HIV HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus), either of two closely related retroviruses that invade T-helper lymphocytes and are responsible for AIDS. There are two types of HIV: HIV-1 and HIV-2. HIV-1 is responsible for the vast majority of AIDS in the United States. . Sadly, this show was also Dashiell's last as a living artist: he died in San Francisco during its final week.

The earlier works (most of which had been shown before in the Bay Area) exude ex·ude
v.
To ooze or pass gradually out of a body structure or tissue.
 a kind of acerbic yet emotionally charged intelligence. Exploring allegory as a desentimentalized way of dealing with emotionally dangerous issues, Dashiell uses sources like Daniel Defoe's A Journal of the Plague Year A Journal of the Plague Year is a novel by Daniel Defoe, first published in March of 1722.

The novel is a fictionalised account of one man's experiences of the year 1665, in which the Great Plague struck the city of London.
, 1722, the Tarot, and Bosch's apocalyptic imagery. Simple yet highly technically proficient images, often accompanied by text, examine both the artist's own sexuality and the millennial tide of fear and loathing fear and loathing - (Hunter S. Thompson) A state inspired by the prospect of dealing with certain real-world systems and standards that are totally brain-damaged but ubiquitous - Intel 8086s, COBOL, EBCDIC, or any IBM machine except the Rios (also known as the RS/6000).  that has risen ever higher in recent years, undermining relationships in gay and straight communities alike. The centerpiece of the show, however, was Queer Mysteries, 1993, a hilarious and disturbing frieze of paintings on four-by-eight-foot sheets of acrylic, completed just this spring. Loosely based on frescoes discovered at the Villa of the Mysteries The Villa of the Mysteries or Villa dei Misteri is a well preserved ruin of a Roman Villa which lies some 800 meters north-west of Pompeii.

Although covered with meters of ash and other volcanic material, the villa sustained only minor damage in the eruption of
 in Pompeii, which depict Dionysian initiation rituals, Dashiell's panoramic version recasts this enigmatic narrative into a more contemporary context. From the doorway of the gallery, in which the 28 panels are installed in a more-or-less continuous band around the room, two overlapping narratives read in opposite directions. From left to right, green-skinned lesbians in sexy sci-fi outfits indoctrinate in·doc·tri·nate  
tr.v. in·doc·tri·nat·ed, in·doc·tri·nat·ing, in·doc·tri·nates
1. To instruct in a body of doctrine or principles.

2.
 an "Earthling" (read heterosexual) woman into their strange society. From right to left, a gentleman explorer enters the cult of a group of gay cannibals in knee-high boots, Edwardian breeches and masks. The activities taking place include apparent torture and restraint, with elaborate futuristic gizmos; drugs, sex, and the exchange of bodily fluids (through an IV); severed heads and penises, all silhouetted against a flat scarlet background. The meaning of these strange rituals is both comically, outrageously obvious and inscrutably elusive. Like the narrative on which the work is based, these are ceremonies of initiation, of belonging: and, even, of coming out. Dashiell's mordantly mor·dant  
adj.
1.
a. Bitingly sarcastic: mordant satire.

b. Incisive and trenchant: an inquisitor's mordant questioning.

2.
 humorous representation of lesbians as sexy aliens and gay men as cannibalistic can·ni·bal  
n.
1. A person who eats the flesh of other humans.

2. An animal that feeds on others of its own kind.



[From Spanish Caníbalis,
 hedonists is also a pointed parody of homophobes' worst nightmares.

Painted on the reverse side of the panels like immense animation cells, these stylized styl·ize  
tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es
1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style.

2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize.
, cartoony figures in aggressively garish colors mime a wry commentary on our culture's comic-book, B-movie conception of myth, fantasy, or even ecstasy, however achieved. Yet the end of each story is also its beginning: the single figure of the smiling initiate, calmly seated, is both the first and last thing we see. As Dashiell reminds his viewers in a wall text written for the exhibition, "We all live in a world that is, for all of us, truly queer."
COPYRIGHT 1993 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1993, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Walter/McBean Gallery, San Francisco Art Institute, San Francisco, California
Author:Porges, Maria
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Oct 1, 1993
Words:505
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